Catching up with a Pilot alum
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This week I got the chance to spend some time with an old friend and
former Daily Pilot reporter that some of you may remember.
Christopher Goffard was a reporter at the Daily Pilot from late
1996 until the spring of 1998. Today, he covers the courts in Tampa
Bay for the St. Petersburg Times.
He was in Orange County to visit with friends and family who still
live in the area.
We spent lunch talking over two plates of tasty crab, shrimp and
spinach enchiladas at Taco Mesa, one of his favorite haunts while he
was working for the Pilot, and caught up with each others lives.
I rambled on about my wife and two daughters and our perpetual
house hunt that we seem to be on and he told me about his wife,
Jennifer, a copy editor at the St. Pete Times and how he is
disappointed that he wasn’t able to learn how to surf on his
honeymoon in Hawaii.
I have to admit that Goffard was one of my favorite reporters and
favorite people I’ve been able to work with at the Pilot. I’m glad to
call him a friend.
His fun-loving and charming personality belie his love for
unearthing the worst of life’s underbelly, the gruesome stories of
murder and mayhem.
The guy is able to dig for stuff like no one I’ve ever seen. His
writing skills are pretty hard to compete against, too.
Some of his big stories include the Eric Bechler murder case; the
trial of John Famalaro, the convicted murderer of Denise Huber; the
murder of Sunny Sudweeks, an Orange Coast College student found slain
in her apartment; the murder of Donna Jacobson, a longtime and
beloved Daily Pilot employee; and a multi-part series on Eric Wayne
Bennett, a rapist and killer who is now on death row at San Quentin.
“I learned all the basic skills at the Daily Pilot,” he said.
That’s nice of him to say, but I’m sure his writing did more for
us, than we did for him. Still, I do believe it was the Bennett
stories that catapulted Goffard’s career.
He covered Bennett’s trial and got the death row story after
dutifully writing to the convicted killer in prison, asking for an
interview.
When he finally got it, he and all of us at the paper, knew we had
a good story on our hands.
He spent several days at San Quentin and masterfully told the
story of Bennett, a carpet layer who viciously raped and murdered a
woman he had done work for.
The stories gave readers a glimpse into the life of this man, who
had been married with children but didn’t paint him as a sympathetic
figure as much as a pathetic one, at least in my eyes.
One behind-the-scenes moment I remember during the series was when
Goffard told us how he ran into Bennett’s fellow death row inmate,
Richard Ramirez, the well-known convicted serial killer known as the
Night Stalker, who was an avowed Satan-worshiper
Goffard noted that the death row inmates have this one area that
they all congregate in.
The news at the time was that Ramirez had become engaged to a
woman, who had been visiting him on death row.
“Congratulations on your recent engagement,” Goffard said in his
encounter with Ramirez.
I guess he really didn’t know what to say to a mass murderer.
Goffard had lots of great stories to tell.
Like in the Bechler case, I remember him telling me how he had
this weird feeling about Bechler and really doubted his sincerity
during the memorial for his wife Pegye, whose body has never been
found.
Of course, we all know now that Bechler is serving time for
murdering his wife during a boat ride on their anniversary and
dumping her body overboard.
As for my good friend, I’m happy to report that he is doing well
in Florida and likes his job very much, though I still think someday
he’ll be back in Southern California, this time probably writing for
our sister paper, the Los Angeles Times.
Until then, I’m sure he’ll just keep uncovering stories and
impressing those who have the luxury of reading them.
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